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OPINION

Are Street Riots the New Normal?

Are Street Riots the New Normal?
Two women walk past the wall of a Bank of America branch in Berkeley, Calif. The University of California, Berkeley was recently marred by violence stemming from protests over Milo Yiannopoulos, a Breitbart News editor. (Jeff Chiu/AP)

Jerry Newcombe By Wednesday, 08 February 2017 03:31 PM EST Current | Bio | Archive

One of the greatest milestones in world history was March 4, 1797.

Why? What happened then?

America, under Constitutional guidance, transitioned from our first president to the second.

George Washington stepped down, and the recently-elected John Adams stepped in.

No bloodshed. No rioting in the streets.

No town-hall meetings cancelled for fear of the speaker being torn limb from limb.

Even the acrimonious battle over who would be the third president was a peaceful transition. This contest was in Congress, in 1801, ultimately stretching out day after day (involving 36 ballots) to see who would win: Thomas Jefferson or Aaron Burr — who had tied with him in the Electoral College.

While the people who oppose President Trump or his policies are free to peacefully express their opinions, they are not free to hurt people and destroy property.

As the saying goes, "Your right to swing your arm ends at the tip of my nose," even if the mantle of "tolerance" is claimed.

The left likes to compare Donald Trump to Adolf Hitler and the Nazis.

Yet, it was Goebbels, Hitler’s propaganda minister, who said, "History is made in the streets." Get enough brown-shirts to beat up and silence the opposition, and you seize power.

Might makes right. That’s not the American way.

An example can be found in The Daily Caller, Jan. 30, 2017, in which Justin Caruso noted, "During an anti-Trump protest in Seattle this weekend, an activist associated with the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement took to the megaphone to voice her support for, among other things, ‘killing people,’ and ‘killing the White House.’"

What happened at the University of Calif., Berkley last week was a horrible bellwether.

In a place famous standing for "free speech," free speech died last week when a controversial "gay conservative" (why do my instincts want to call that an oxymoron?), Breitbart News editor Milo Yiannopoulos — a Trump-supporter — was uninvited from speaking after violent protests broke out over his appearance, causing more than $100,000 in damage and several injuries.

The cancellation of his talk was not by the college, not by the organizers of the talk, but by mob rule.

The San Francisco Chronicle quoted one of the student protesters on Feb. 1, 2017, "The whole reason we’re here is for free speech . . . Milo’s hate speech is not allowed here. When it’s hate speech, our free speech is to shut him down."

The Chronicle added, "The protest turned violent around 6 p.m, when dozens of masked anarchists, dressed in black and wearing backpacks, emerged from the otherwise peaceful crowd."

Tucker Carlson interviewed Yiannopoulos that night; the Fox News broadcaster observed, commenting, "This looks like political violence designed to squelch opinions the perpetrators of that violence disagree with."

Some Hollywood people spoke out in favor of the protests:

  • Director Judd Apatow said of the Berkley riots, "This is just the beginning."
  • Sarah Silverman, with whom I once appeared on an episode of Bill Maher’s Politically Incorrect (2002), has called for a violent overthrow of the duly-elected president. She tweeted, "Wake up and join the resistance . Once the military is w US fascists get overthrown. Mad King and his handlers go bye bye . . . " [Emphasis hers]
  • Filmmaker Lexi Alexander, according to Fox News "Entertainment" (Feb. 2, 2017 defended the Berkley riot on Twitter "telling her followers to ‘punch Nazis,’ ‘riot when your college invites a Nazi,’ and ‘set it all on fire.’" And she tweeted, "Hate speech is not free speech. It's called incitement. It's a crime."

The next night, protests at New York University (NYU) attempted to shut down another conservative speaker, but the event happened anyway.

Eleven protesters were arrested.

So many of these recent protesters are, as my brother put it, r"eal fascists in the name of pretend anti-fascism."

And who is to define "hate speech"?

I have a friend who is a former lesbian. She was converted to Christ and is grateful to be free from her former lifestyle. Back when "hate crime" laws (aren’t all crimes hateful?) were being proposed, she expressed concern that some politically correct folks would absurdly interpret her Christian-testimony as so-called "hate speech."

Yiannopoulos made a little YouTube video responding to the Berkeley protests, saying, "The progressive left in America has been engaged in this project of conflating ideas with action."

And he added, "America, of all places, now, is seeing political violence in response to ideas . . ."

Is this the new normal? Riots in the streets to wear us down?

The left didn’t win at the ballot box in a surprising upset. Now, do they want to invalidate the election results by causing violence in the streets?

The genius of what the Founding Fathers gave us in the Constitution —and all the blessings that flow from our God-given liberty---should not be allowed to be undone by thuggery.

Jerry Newcombe is co-host/senior TV producer of Kennedy Classics. He has written/co-written 25 books, including "The Book That Made America, Doubting Thomas" (with Mark Beliles), "What If Jesus Had Never Been Born?" (With D. James Kennedy), and "George Washington's Sacred Fire" (with Peter Lillback). For more of his reports, Go Here Now.

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JerryNewcombe
The genius of what the Founding Fathers gave us in the Constitution, and all the blessings that flow from our God-given liberty, should not be allowed to be undone by thuggery.
berkeley, founders, opinions, property
863
2017-31-08
Wednesday, 08 February 2017 03:31 PM
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